Jump to content

delreyfreak

Members
  • Content Count

    1,543
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by delreyfreak

  1. Omg they're actually selling it early then. I guess this means we will get uploads of the album by the 13th
  2. So how many hours left until the full Honeymoon album trailer will be posted to Lana's VEVO?? Did we get a time? Thanks xxx
  3. I wouldn't even say almost tbh. We've had so much porn on the site lately I'm scared to be reading threads when other people are in the room
  4. oh shit you're right. Still why the fuck is there a cricket sound effect at the start of HBTB then???? Lana sis wyd?? Unless there are crickets in God Knows I Tried too?
  5. OMG just realized that whoever heard the crickets at the start of HBTB was correct when they predicted Freak would have crickets in them. Go listen to the preview, there is a cricket sound effect in the background, and since HBTB follows Freak on the tracklist, it makes sense you can hear a faint cricket sound at the start. Honeymoon: gapless album coming for our weaves
  6. I had a bizarre theory about Honeymoon that I don't think anyone has brought up yet. Well, I feel as if Honeymoon has something to do with time. Honeymoon (the song) and Terrence Loves You use a lot of archaic vocabulary and phrases. For example, not many people use the phrase "neither fought nor found" but Lana does in the bridge of Honeymoon. Plus, she sings "never dare change thee" (which is simply an old word that was used to mean "you". Also note that my dictionary states that it should be "restricted to archaic or religious contexts", and obviously the song doesn't have a religious theme, so I feel like it's definitely supposed to be set in the past.) Lana's language in both Honeymoon and Terrence Loves You evoke a sense of formality that you don't usually hear in modern music. Also, from what has been described about Music To Watch Boys To (retro film noir) and God Knows I Tried (gospel song), it's quite possible to conclude the first portion of the album is set in the past, most likely in the Jazz Age in the 20's - seeing as both the songs at the start of the album have clear jazz influences. Gospel music also started to become quite popular just after the 20's, so it would make sense that it comes after the jazz-influenced songs. As the album progresses, Lana has stated that it builds up to a lot of more mid-tempo and uptempo songs, which could symbolise the songs working towards a more present-day setting. High By The Beach sounds like it could be from the 60's. We then have Burnt Norton as an interlude, which, by the way, is a poem about time - how the past, present and future are all connected. This would make a lot of sense in relation to my theory of the album working with time. Lana also said in her interview with James Franco that the album then returns to its initial jazzy sound at the end, which probably means the songs slow down towards the end again (which could make sense considering there's a jazz cover to conclude). Also, 24 sounds like it could relate to this theme of time on the record. Maybe the story is Lana looking into the future, "dreaming away" her life, and then around the interlude, she starts to return to reality.
  7. It's not even available in Australia yet, that's why we want a link right now. I downloaded a copy someone posted on the status update but it still wasn't a HQ version.
  8. I hear "You'd make it nighttime all today"
  9. Where is the Honeymoon HQ? I really wanted to hear the version with the enriched instrumental
  10. sammeee, her voice is so soothing, I could just listen to her talking for hours
  11. Time present and time past Are both perhaps present in time future, And time future contained in time past. If all time is eternally present All time is unredeemable. What might have been is an abstraction Remaining a perpetual possibility Only in a world of speculation. What might have been and what has been Point to one end, which is always present. Footfalls echo in the memory Down the passage which we did not take Towards the door we never opened Into the rose-garden.
  12. It is a bit off-key, and personally I prefer the original, but this was an interesting concept!
  13. I just went through every single station suggesting all the Lana songs. I guess I officially have no life right now
  14. These are slaying so much omg they're perf
  15. Mess @ y'all forgetting JFK and Bel Air, two of Lana's best lyrical masterpieces
  16. That moment when this basic-ass song is higher on the charts than any of Lana's amazing HM songs
×
×
  • Create New...